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Samsung QE65QN85C Review

Samsung’s entry level Mini LED with a formidable spec and vibrant picture

In This Article

In This Article

Verdict

Verdict

Discerning console gamers looking for a premium living room TV will be well served by the Samsung QN85C. This 65-inch Mini LED model has dynamics to spare, and boasts an excellent bright room performance, although there are a few AI-caveats to be aware of…

Pros

Cons

Key Features

Introduction

The QN85C is the entry level Mini LED backlitNeo QLEDmodel in Samsung’s 2023 range. With a formidable specification and vibrant picture performance, it may well persuade you thatQD-OLEDis not the way forward after all.

Think of this Neo QLED as an everyday screen with specialist gaming functionality. All four HDMI inputs are 4K 120Hz ready, and there’s support forHDR10+ Adaptivebut notDolby Vision.

The set also has aDolby Atmos, OTS (Object Tracking Sound) immersive sound system built in. Smart functionality comes via Samsung’s all-encompassing Tizen OS, and it doesn’t miss a trick.

Availability

The QN85C is available now in choice of 55-, 65-, 75- and 85-inch screen sizes (QE55QN85C, QE65QN85C, QE75QN85C and QE85QN85C)  priced at £1,599, £2,099, £3,599, and £4,699 respectively.

The same screen sizes are available in the US, priced $1499, $1999, $2499, and $3799.

I’m reviewing the 65-inch model here.

Design

While the provision of theMini LEDbacklight means the QN85C can’t match edge-lit LCDs for thinness, this set still casts a slim shadow with a uniform 28mm depth. The bezel is minimal, with only a discrete logo breaking the line bottom right. The screen sits on a heavy metal central pedestal stand, and looks fine front on, although I would have liked some swivel in the stand.

While all four HDMI inputs support High Frame Rate sources, only HDMI 3 iseARC enabled. There’s also an optical digital output, Ethernet, two USB ports and a CI card slot. Wireless connectivity covers Bluetooth and dual band Wi-Fi. There’s a choice of terrestrial or dual satellite tuner feeds.

The QN85C comes with two remote controls, one a standard zapper, the other a simplified, slimmer stick. Both have dedicated buttons forNetflix, Prime Video,Samsung TV plusand Disney+.

Features

As much a smart home hub as a streaming TV platform, the Tizen platform provides a plethora of features. There has been a slight redesign this season, with some downsized icons, but ease of navigation and versatility remain high.

The main home page comprises a single scrolling bar for streaming apps. Netflix, Prime Video, BBC iPlayer, ITVX,Disney+,Apple TV+, YouTube, All Four, My5 and Samsung TV Plus – they’re all here.

The left hand menu has tabs for Search, Ambient, Game and Media playback. You can also jump from here to any connected devices as well as the main Settings menu.

A dedicated Game Hub groups cloud gaming services, including Xbox Game Pass, Utomik and Twitch, and connected consoles together. There’s also a UI overlay which features all the key game settings (accessed via a long press on the Play/Pause button), including input lag,VRRand HDR info.

The TV is alsoAMD FreeSync Premium Procompatible and can be used with Nvidia G-Sync.

I measured input lag at an impressive 9.4ms (1080/60), in Game mode. With Game Motion Plus engaged, which retains some image enhancing processing, this drops to 25ms.

Picture Quality

Image quality is akin to popping candy. Pictures are effortlessly dynamic and rainbow rich. The Quantum Mini LED backlight may lack the pixel precision of QD-OLED panels, but it doesn’t suffer from overt halos, and the sheer vibrancy of hues is remarkable.

Overall image uniformity is generally good, and contrast is high.

I measured peak HDR brightness at 1096 nits with a 10 per cent measurement patch. That’s enough to ensure specular highlights and bright reflections sparkle as intended, given most HDR TV content is mastered with a 1000 nit ceiling.

HDR support covers HDR10 and HDR10+, but Dolby Vision is notable by its absence. On a screen this bright, there’s less of a price to be paid for the loss, compared to panels with lower brightness.

Doing the heavy picture lifting is the brand’s Neural Quantum Processor 4K, which utilises AI techniques and twenty neural networks to automatically optimise images on a scene-by-scene basis.

An Intelligent Picture mode is available to manage brightness, contrast and fine detail, regardless of what you watch.

For the less trusting there are more traditional image presets: Standard, Eco, Movie,Filmmaker mode, and Dynamic. Standard was my preferred go-to; it’s akin to keeping the volume level just out of clipping.

Local dimming is variable between Low, Standard or High. My advice is to stick with Low to ensure optimum contrast.

Black level performance is remarkably good. In a fully dark viewing room, letterbox bars are a solid black, there’s none of that hazy greyness that traditionally defines LED screens. The letterbox bars on We have a Ghost (Netflix 4K HDR) are appropriately solid, and the movie’s many dark house sequences largely retain coherent shadow detail, albeit with some low luminance clouding.

Where the panel really impresses is as a gaming display. Overwatch in 4K 120fps is buttery smooth and gloriously detailed. While game consoles automatically trigger Game mode, you’ll need to manually activate HDR in the Game Picture Expert settings (under Connection). My preference was to set Game HDR to On, and Basic. When left off, the average picture level is overly bright.

Motion handling is more a matter of taste. Image interpolation is powerful, but comes with consequences. When Picture Clarity is switched Off, pictures look cinematic but there is a price to be paid in judder. I eventually decided Auto was the best option. If you find the soap opera effect is bothersome, it’s probably worth experimenting with the blur and judder sliders in Custom mode.

Sound Quality

The set’s audio performance is extremely good, especially given how discrete the drivers are. There are six channels at play here, two of which are placed top rear.

The set paints a large soundstage and demonstrates a good deal of front soundstage panning. The OTS (Object Tracking Sound) audio presentation is busy without sounding cacophonous.

While the aforementioned Intelligent Mode will serve most viewers well when it comes to image quality, there are issues with AI audio, which is deliberately dialogue focused, and the Amplify sound setting is particularly strident. I much preferred AI Audio switched off.

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Should you buy it?

It offers great value:The QN85C is a lot of telly for the money. It’s ideal for bright room viewing, and has excellent gaming functionality, thanks to those 4K 120Hz HDMI inputs and dedicated Game Hub UI.

If you want Dolby Vision:Samsung doesn’t bow at the altar of Dolby Vision, so if you’re intent on getting a TV that supports that HDR format, its best to look elsewhere.

Final Thoughts

The QN85C is an eye-catching addition to Samsung’s Mini LED fleet, which doesn’t appear to sacrifice much to earn its entry-level status. Image quality impresses, with bold contrast, excellent colour vibrancy. The Neural Quantum Processor does a great job up scaling lower res sources to 4k.

Couple this to a powerful smart platform, with no shortage of streaming apps or Samsung TV Plus IP TV channels, plus a dedicated Game Hub, and you have an all-round package that makes more expensive models look like an unnecessary indulgence.

How we test

We test every television we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in ourethics policy.

Tested for more than a week

Benchmarked with tests

Tested with real world use

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FAQs

The main difference between QLED and Neo QLED is that the latter has a Mini LED backlight. This is filled with hundreds, if not thousands, of small LEDs that offer finer control over brightness and black levels than you would get from a Samsung QLED model.

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Full specs

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As part of this mission, whenever we review a product we send the company a series of questions to help us gauge and make transparent the impact the device has on the environment.

We currently haven’t received answers to the questions on this product, but will update this page the moment we do. You can see a detailed breakdown of the questions we ask and why in oursustainability page.

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Neo QLED

Steve May is an entertainment technology specialist who contributes to a variety of popular UK websites and publications. Creator of Home Cinema Choice magazine, Steve writes about tech for the i news…

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We also expect our journalists to follow clear ethical standards in their work. Our staff members must strive for honesty and accuracy in everything they do. We follow the IPSO Editors’ code of practice to underpin these standards.

Why trust our journalism?

Founded in 2003, Trusted Reviews exists to give our readers thorough, unbiased and independent advice on what to buy.

Today, we have millions of users a month from around the world, and assess more than 1,000 products a year.

Editorial independence means being able to give an unbiased verdict about a product or company, with the avoidance of conflicts of interest. To ensure this is possible, every member of the editorial staff follows a clear code of conduct.

We also expect our journalists to follow clear ethical standards in their work. Our staff members must strive for honesty and accuracy in everything they do. We follow the IPSO Editors’ code of practice to underpin these standards.